The legislature, in 2007, decided to take 15% of wages, regardless of the extreme hardship such a loss will impose on many persons. Because the legislature explicitly eliminated judicial discretion in the determination of the amount to deduct from wages, we must reverse the circuit court’s order and remand for further proceedings in accord with this opinion.
Recognizing the limited role of the courts, constrained to give effect to the clear intent of the legislature, we must reverse the circuit court’s order and remand for further proceedings on the application for a wage deduction order. We implore the legislature to consider its amendment to section 12-803 and to adopt a statute similar to section 5240 of the New York Civil Practice Law and Rules (N.Y. C.P.L.R. 5240 (McKinney 2016)).
2018 IL App (1st) 170861
No. 1-17-0861
December 24, 2018
FIRST DIVISION
IN THE APPELLATE
COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST DISTRICT
NATIONAL COLLEGIATE
STUDENT LOAN TRUST 2004-1 VS. DEBORAH OGUNBIYI and EMMANUEL OGUNBIYI
Appeal from the
Circuit Court of Cook County.
No. 11 M6 004634
JUSTICE WALKER delivered the judgment of the court, with
opinion.
Presiding Justice Mikva and Justice Griffin concurred in the
judgment and opinion.
OPINION
Deborah Ogunbiyi (Deborah) did not repay her student
loans. When she found a job
paying $573.35 per week, the note holder sought an order
garnishing 15% of her pretax
income. The Cook County circuit court found that the
garnishment would impose excessive
hardship on Deborah and ordered Deborah to pay $100 per
month until she paid off the debt.
The note holder appeals. We find that the legislature
expressly disallowed the exercise of
judicial discretion in ordering wage garnishment, even in
cases of extreme hardship. We
reverse the circuit court’s order and remand for further
proceedings on the application for a
wage deduction order.
BACKGROUND
In 2004 Charter One Bank loaned Deborah $8000 for her
enrollment at Lincoln College.
Emmanuel Ogunbiyi (Emmanuel) cosigned the loan. In December
2011, National Collegiate
Student Loan Trust 2004-1 (Trust) filed a complaint against
Deborah and Emmanuel,
alleging that Deborah and Emmanuel defaulted on the loan,
and that Charter One sold its
interest in the loan to the Trust. The Trust sought to
recover more than $10,000 for the note.
Deborah and Emmanuel were self-represented, but they filed
no answer to the complaint. In
2012 the circuit court entered a default order against
Deborah and Emmanuel, finding that
they owed $10,472.91 as of the date of the order. The court
subsequently entered an agreed
judgment including a payment schedule.
In November 2016 the Trust sent to Enova International,
Inc., a wage deduction notice,
informing Enova that the Trust would ask the circuit court
to enter a judgment against Enova
for the garnishable wages Enova owed to Deborah. An attorney
for the Trust certified that
Deborah and Emmanuel repaid only $150 of the debt, which had
grown to $14,529.65. The
Trust filed a document asserting that Deborah earned $14.25
per hour working for Enova, for
a total of $1146.70 in gross earnings for every two-week pay
period. After taxes, Deborah
received $1013.15 every paycheck, if she took no time off.
The Trust asserted that the Code
of Civil Procedure established its right to receive $172.01
($1146.70 x 0.15) from each
paycheck. The deduction would leave Deborah with $841.14
($1013.15 – $172.01) each pay
period, for $21,869.64 per year ($841.14 x 26), if she took
no time off.
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Deborah appeared in court and persuaded the court that
the wage deduction would
impose excessive hardship on her. The trial court entered an
order, dated January 31, 2017,
dismissing the wage deduction action against Enova and
directing Enova to “cease all
withholdings and release” to Deborah her earnings.
The Trust filed a motion to vacate the dismissal of the
wage deduction complaint. The
Trust asserted that hardship could not provide grounds for
the court to dismiss the complaint.
The trial court denied the motion to vacate and ordered
Deborah to pay the Trust $100 per
month until she paid off the loan. The Trust filed a notice
of appeal.
ANALYSIS
The Trust argues on appeal only that the statute
mandates garnishment of $172.01 from
every one of Deborah’s paychecks, regardless of hardship.
The Trust did not include in the
record on appeal a transcript of the hearing at which
Deborah persuaded the court that the
15% deduction from her gross income will cause her economic
hardship. On this record, the
Trust cannot contest the trial court’s factual finding that
the garnishment of the maximum
amount permitted by the statute will cause Deborah undue
hardship.
We review the court’s interpretation of the statute de
novo. Revolution Portfolio, LLC v.
Beale, 332 Ill. App. 3d 595, 600 (2002). The Trust relies
solely on the language of the
statute. The Trust cites no case that supports its assertion
that the court lacks authority to take
into account the hardship court orders will impose on
litigants. The Trust did not mention a
significant change in the wording of the statute.
Until 2007, section 12-803 of the Code of Civil
Procedure provided that “The maximum
wages *** subject to collection under a deduction order”
could not exceed 15% of the
3
employee’s gross pay, and the deduction order had to leave
the employee with at least 45
times the federal minimum hourly wage each week. 735 ILCS
5/12-803 (West 2006). In
2007, the General Assembly enacted Public Act 95-661 (eff.
Jan. 1, 2008), which amended
several statutes. The Act eliminated from section 12-803 the
word “maximum,” so that “[t]he
wages *** subject to collection under a deduction order”
could not exceed either limit
previously imposed. Id.; 735 ILCS 5/12-803 (West 2016). The
governor issued an
amendatory veto, specifically asking the legislature to put
the word “maximum” back into
section 12-803.
On October 10, 2007, the Illinois Senate voted to
override the amendatory veto. 95th Ill.
Gen. Assem., Senate Proceedings, Oct. 10, 2007, at 30-31. On
October 11, the Illinois House
considered the same veto. The transcript of House debates
shows the following discussion:
“[Representative] Feigenholtz: *** In this legislation you
have… you removed
the word ‘maximum’ in the underlying Bill in the language.
Is that correct?
[Representative] Mathias: That’s correct.
Feigenholtz: So, right now, judges have discretion when
deciding how much
wages are to be garnished. Is that correct?
Mathias: *** [O]ne (1) judge in particular in Cook County
*** interpreted that
that he could, in effect, not follow the percentage that’s
listed in the law and lower
that percentage and basically, that’s what we’re trying to
correct. I believe it was the
original intent of the Bill to make it a set amount ***.
* * *
4
Feigenholtz: So, in current statute and also the intent of
this Bill is to continue
under those circumstances that are unique to allow certain
discretions for the
judiciary. Is that true? ***
Mathias: The exemption is not discretionary. ***
Feigenholtz: So, is what you’re saying that judges will
still have the flexibility in
hardship cases to order a smaller percentage of garnishment?
Mathias: No that isn’t correct ***.
Feigenholtz: But if the life circumstances of the *** person
whose wages are to
be garnished change, they have an opportunity to go back to
the judge?
Mathias: No, they do not.
Feigenholtz: So… so, for instance, if a father of *** seven
(7) children who ***
has to provide a lot of support for a family, they’re not
allowed to go back to court?
*** I’m a little concerned that there are going to be some,
a few situations, a few
hardship cases, where a smaller percentage of garnishment
might be more livable.
Mathias: Again, if someone’s wages go below the formula in
the Bill, then they
would not have any of their wages *** deducted. These,
again, if they do not meet
that criteria, then the law is followed.
Feigenholtz: And it doesn’t have anything to do with how big
their family is, the
federal poverty level rate, the only mathematical
calculation is forty-five (45) times
[federal] minimum wage?
Mathias: Yeah. ***
5
* * *
[Representative] Lang: *** [T]o not override this Veto is to
say that people don’t
have to pay their bills. To not override this Veto means
that you’re saying to
businesses, well, maybe you’ll collect the money people owe
you, maybe you won’t.
To not override the Veto says that we’re going to allow
judges their own discretion
as to who’s going to pay their bills and who is not. *** The
wage deduction laws
allow creditors *** a deduction of a small amount from a
weekly wage to recover the
money owed. The size of the person’s family is *** not
important because if you buy
a TV and you don’t pay it back whether you’ve got twelve
(12) children or no
children, you should pay back the money for the TV you
bought. If we don’t do this,
we’re going to continue to have judges who decide on their
own who pays what,
under what circumstances they pay it. ***
* * *
[Representative] Turner: So, if you were to summarize what
we’re doing with
this Bill, it pretty much is dealing with the issue of
judicial discretion. Am I correct?
Mathias: Yes. ***
* * *
[Representative] Davis, M.: *** I think that if a person
owes a debt he should be
responsible for paying it, but I do not believe there should
be no consideration for his
other responsibilities, a new family, college students, a
baby that’s ill. *** [T]here
are many considerations and I really like the law currently
that allows a judge to
make a determination of should it be a 15 percent deduction,
a zero, a 1 percent, a 2
6
percent. I don’t like the idea of someone settling how much
it should be before they
know any of the circumstances. *** This is a Bill to help
someone else, but it is not
to help constituents or working people in the State of
Illinois.” 95th Ill. Gen. Assem.,
House Proceedings, Oct. 11, 2007, at 100-14.
Ninety-two representatives voted to override the veto.
Only nine voted to sustain it. Id. at
115.
We have found no Illinois case deciding whether section
12-803, prior to 2007, permitted
the circuit court to exercise discretion to order
garnishment of an amount less than the
maximum set by section 12-803. Courts in other jurisdictions
interpreting similar statutes
held that the garnishment statutes set only an upper limit
on garnishable wages, and courts
had discretion to order garnishment of lesser amounts while
still requiring repayment of the
entire debt. See, e.g., Fishler v. Fishler, 63 N.Y.S.3d 445,
447-48 (N.Y. App. Div. 2017);
Gerber v. Holcomb, No. W2005-02794-COA-R3-CV, 2006 WL
3019731, at *2-3 (Tenn. Ct.
App. Oct. 25, 2006); Thompson v. Dehne, 2009-NMCA-120, ¶¶
19-20, 147 N.M. 283, 220
P.3d 1132; In re Chambers, 5 S.W.3d 341, 343 (Tex. Ct. App.
1999). By removing the word
“maximum” from the statute, the legislature showed its
intent to deny the courts the
discretion to enter a wage deduction order in an amount less
than the amount set by section
12-803.
The circuit court here did not enter a wage deduction
order in a lesser amount. The court
entered an order (1) denying the motion for a wage deduction
order and (2) dismissing Enova
from the case, with the admonishment that Enova must
continue paying Deborah her aftertax wages. The court then ordered Deborah to
pay the Trust $100 per month to pay off her
7
student loans. Courts in other jurisdictions have entered
similar orders denying wage
garnishments while directing the judgment debtor to adhere
to a payment schedule set by the
court. See American Acceptance Co. v. Willis, 984 N.E.2d
653, 655 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013);
Warner Bros. Records Inc. v. Patnode, No. 2:06-CV-160, 2010
WL 431908, *1 (W.D. Mich.
Feb 5., 2010); M.M. v. T.M., 17 N.Y.S.3d 588, 599-600 (N.Y.
Sup. Ct. 2015).
The M.M. court found that it had “broad discretion to
regulate the enforcement of a
money judgment to prevent unreasonable annoyance, expense,
embarrassment, disadvantage,
or other prejudice to any person or the courts.” M.M., 17
N.Y.S.3d at 600. A New York
statute provides, “The court may at any time, on its own
initiative or the motion of any
interested person, and upon such notice as it may require,
make an order denying, limiting,
conditioning, regulating, extending or modifying the use of
any enforcement procedure.”
N.Y. C.P.L.R. 5240 (McKinney 2016). We find no similar
statute in Illinois. Section 12
808(e) of the Code of Civil Procedure apparently disallows
the exercise of judicial discretion,
as it states that, upon proof of the debt and the lack of
any proof of the extremely limited
grounds for denying wage deduction, “an order shall be entered
compelling the employer to
deduct from wages of the judgment debtor *** an amount which
is” the amount set by
section 12-803. 735 ILCS 5/12-808(e) (West 2016). Public Act
95-661 also amended section
12-808(e), which, prior to 2007, said the deduction order
must set an “amount not to exceed”
the amount set by section 12-803. Compare 735 ILCS
5/12-808(e) (West 2006), with 735
ILCS 5/12-808(e) (West 2016).
We hold
that the wage deduction provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure leave the
circuit court no discretion to deny a request for a wage
deduction order on grounds of
8
extreme hardship. We commend Judge Panozzo’s consideration
of the equities that should
determine the amounts taken from a debtor and the time
allotted for repayment of a debt.
Recognizing the limited role of the courts, constrained
to give effect to the clear intent of
the legislature, we must reverse the circuit court’s order
and remand for further proceedings
on the application for a wage deduction order.
We implore
the legislature to consider its amendment to section 12-803 and to adopt
statute similar
to section 5240 of the New York Civil Practice Law and Rules
(N.Y. C.P.L.R. 5240 (McKinney
2016)).
CONCLUSION
The legislature, in 2007, decided to take 15% of wages,
regardless of the extreme
hardship such a loss will impose on many persons. Because
the legislature explicitly
eliminated judicial discretion in the determination of the
amount to deduct from wages, we
must reverse the circuit court’s order and remand for
further proceedings in accord with this
opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
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